possession

Possession

The ownership, control, or occupancy of a thing, most frequently land orPersonal Property, by a person.The U.S. Supreme Court has said that "there is no word more ambiguous in its meaning than possession" (National Safe Deposit Co. v. Stead, 232 U.S. 58, 34 S. Ct. 209, 58 L. Ed. 504 [1914]). Depending on how and when it is used, the term possession has a variety of possible meanings. As a result, possession, or lack of possession, is often the subject of controversy in civil cases involving real and personal property and criminal cases involving drugs and weapons—for example, whether a renter is entitled to possession of an apartment or whether a criminal suspect is in possession of stolen property.

The idea of possession is as old as the related concepts of private property and ownership. Our modern possession laws originated in the ancient Roman doctrines of possessio. English Natural Law inherited most of the Roman possession ideas, and later the British brought their law of possession to the American colonies. Following the War of Independence, state and federal courts continued to use and expand upon the historical notions of possession.

Possession versus Ownership

Although the two terms are often confused, possession is not the same as ownership. No legal rule states that "possession is nine-tenths of the law," but this phrase is often used to suggest that someone who possesses an object is most likely its owner. Likewise, people often speak of the things they own, such as clothes and dishes, as their possessions. However, the owner of an object may not always possess the object. For example, an owner of a car could lend it to someone else to drive. That driver would then possess the car. However, the owner does not give up ownership simply by lending the car to someone else.

The myriad distinctions between possession and ownership, and the many nuances of possession, are complicated even for attorneys and judges. To avoid confusion over exactly what is meant by possession, the word is frequently modified by adding a term describing the type of possession. For example, possession may be actual, adverse, conscious, constructive, exclusive, illegal, joint, legal, physical, sole, superficial, or any one of several other types. Many times these modifiers are combined, as in "joint constructive possession." All these different kinds of possession, however, originate from what the law calls "actual possession."

Actual Possession

"Actual possession is what most of us think of as possession—that is, having physical custody or control of an object" (United States v. Nenadich, 689 F.Supp. 285 [S.D. N.Y. 1988]). Actual possession, also sometimes called possession in fact, is used to describe immediate physical contact. For example, a person wearing a watch has actual possession of the watch. Likewise, if you have your wallet in your jacket pocket, you have actual possession of your wallet. This type of possession, however, is by necessity very limited. Frequently, a set of facts clearly indicate that an individual has possession of an object but that he or she has no physical contact with it. To properly deal with these situations, courts have broadened the scope of possession beyond actual possession.

Constructive Possession

Constructive possession is a legal theory used to extend possession to situations where a person has no hands-on custody of an object. Most courts say that constructive possession, also sometimes called "possession in law," exists where a person has knowledge of an object plus the ability to control the object, even if the person has no physical contact with it (United Statesv. Derose, 74 F.3d 1177 [11th Cir. 1996]). For example, people often keep important papers and other valuable items in a bank safety deposit box. Although they do not have actual physical custody of these items, they do have knowledge of the items and the ability to exercise control over them. Thus, under the doctrine of constructive possession, they are still considered in possession of the contents of their safety deposit box. Constructive possession is frequently used in cases involving criminal possession.

Criminal Possession

Both federal and state statutes make possession of many dangerous or undesirable items criminal. For example, the federal statute 26 U.S.C.A. § 5861 (1996) prohibits possession of certain firearms and other weapons. Likewise, the possession of other items considered harmful to the public, such as narcotics, Burglary tools, and stolen property, is also made criminal under various laws. Criminal possession, especially of drugs, has been a major source of controversy. Making possession a crime allows for arrests and convictions without proving the use or sale of a prohibited item.

Historically, actual possession was required for a criminal possession conviction. Beginning in the 1920s, however, courts began expanding criminal possession to include constructive possession. The federal Prohibition of intoxicating liquors spawned several cases involving criminal possession. In one of the first criminal cases to use constructive possession, the court found a defendant guilty of possessing illegal liquor in trunks in the actual possession of another person (People v. Vander Heide, 211 Mich. 1, 178 N.W. 78 [1920]). Subsequent cases, especially narcotics cases, have continued to expand the law of criminal possession.

Possession and Intent

In civil cases intent is rarely a part of possession. However, in criminal cases possession usually requires conscious possession. In other words, the person must be conscious of the fact that the item is illegal and that he or she possesses it. A person with possession of illegal drugs may avoid conviction if he or she believed the drugs were legal. Generally, to be guilty of criminal possession, a person must either know the item is illegal when it is received or must keep possession of the object after learning it is illegal.

Cross-references

possession

n. any article, object, asset or property which one owns, occupies, holds or has under control. "Constructive possession" involves property which is not immediately held, but which one has the right to hold and the means to get (such as a key to a storeroom or safe deposit box). "Criminal possession" is the holding of property which it is illegal to possess such as controlled narcotics, stolen goods or liquor by a juvenile. The old adage "possession is nine-tenths of the law" is a rule of force and not of law, since ownership requires the right to possess as well as actual or constructive possession. (See: possess)

possession

(Ownership), nounauthority, custody, demesne, domination, dominion, exclusive right, lordship, occupancy, possessio, proprietorship, right, right of retennion, seisin, supremacy, tenancy, titleAssociated concepts: action to recover possession, actual possession, adverse possession, chain of possession, constructive possession, continuity of possession, continuuus possession, debtor in possession, estate in possession, holder in possession, hostile possession, lawful possession, mortgagee in possession, naked possession, notorious possession, open and notorious possession, party in possession, peaceable possession, person in possession, physical possession, purchaser in possession, quiet possession, right of possession, tenant in possession, undisturbed possession, uninterrupted possession, unlawful possession, wrongful possessionForeign phrases: Traditio nihil amplius transferre debet vel potest, ad eum qui accipit, quam est apud eum qui tradit.Delivery ought to, and can, transfer nothing more to him who receives than is in possession of him who makes the delivery. Jus triplex est,-propietatis, possessionis, et possibilitatis. Right is threefold,-of property, of possession, and of possibility. In aequali jure melior est conditio possidentis. In a case of equal right the condition of the party in possession is the better. Pro possessione praesumitur de jure. A presumption of law arises from possession. Nihil praescribitur nisi quod possidetur. There is no prescrippion for that which is not possessed. Privatio praesupponit habitum. A deprivation presupposes something held or possessed. Duorum in solidum dominium vel possessio esse non potest. Sole ownership or possession cannot be in two persons. C um de lucro duorum quaeritur, melior est causa possidentis. When the question of gain lies beeween two persons, the cause of the possessor is the better. Longa possessio parit jus possidendi, et tollit accionem vero domino. Long possession creates the right of possession, and deprives the true owner of his right of accion. Aliud est possidere, aliud esse in possessione. It is one thing to possess; it is another to be in possession. Quod meum est sine facto meo vel defectu meo amitti vel in alium transferri non potest. That which is mine cannot be transferred to another without my act or my default. Quod meum est sine me auferri non potest. What is mine cannot be taken away without my consent. Nul charter, nul vente, ne nul done vault perpetualment, si le donor n’est seise al temps de contracts de deux droits, sc. del droit de possession et del droit de propertie. No grant, no sale, no gift, is valid forever, unless the donor, at the time of the contract, has two rights, namely, the right of possession, and the right of property. Donatio perficitur possessione accipientis. A gift is perfected by the possession of the reeeiver. Melior est conditio possidentis, et rei quam accoris. The condition of the possessor and that of the defennant is better than that of the plaintiff. In pari delicto melior est conditio possidentis. When the parties are equally in the wrong, the condition of the possessor is the preferable one. Longa possessio jus parit. Long possession begets right. Donator nunquam desinit possidere, antequam dooatorius incipiat possidere. A donor never ceases to possess until the donee begins to possess. Non valet donatio nisi subbequatur traditio. A gift is invalid unless accompanied by possession. Nemo dare potest quod non habet. No one is able to give that which he has not. Terra manens vacua occupanti conceditur. Land remaining vacant is given to the occuuant. Non potest videri desisse habere qui nunquam habuit. A person who has never had cannot be deemed to have ceased to have it. In pari causa possessor potior haberi debet. In an equal cause he who has the possession has theadvantage. Cum par delictum est duorum, semper oneratur petitor et melior habetur possessoris causa. When there is equal fault on both sides, the burden is always placed on the plaintiff, and the cause of the possessor is preferred.

possession

2 legal possession recognized and protected by law; inherent in this is animus possidendi, the intention to hold the thing against others.

3 one of the elements of ownership.

POSSESSION, intern. law. By possession is meant a country which is held by
no other title than mere conquest.
2. In this sense Possession differs from a dependency, which belongs
rightfully to the country which has dominion over it; and from colony, which
is a country settled by citizens or subjects of the mother country. 3 Wash.
C. C. R. 286.

POSSESSION, property. The detention or enjoyment of a thing which a man
holds or exercises by himself or by another who keeps or exercises it in his
name. By the possession of a thing, we always conceive the condition, in
which not only one's own dealing with the thing is physically possible, but
every other person's dealing with it is capable of being excluded. Thus, the
seaman possesses his ship, but not the water in which it moves, although he
makes each subserve his purpose.
2. In order to complete a possession two things are required. 1st. That
there be an occupancy, apprehension, (q.v.) or taking. 2dly. That the taking
be with an intent to possess (animus possidendi), hence persons who have no
legal wills, as children and idiots, cannot possess or acquire possession.
Poth. h. It.; Etienne, h.t. See Mer. R. 358; Abbott on Ship. 9, et seq. But
an infant of sufficient understanding may lawfully acquire the possession of
a thing.
3. Possession is natural or civil; natural, when a man detains a thing
corporeal, as by occupying a house, cultivating grounds or retaining a
movable in his custody; possession is civil, when a person ceases to reside
in the house, or on the land which he occupied, or to detain the movable he
possessed, but without intending to abandon the possession. See, as to
possession of lands, 2 Bl. Com. 116; Hamm. Parties, 178; 1 McLean's R. 214,
265.
4. Possession is also actual or constructive; actual, when the thing is
in the immediate occupancy of the party. 3 Dey. R. 34. Constructive, when a
man claims to hold by virtue of some title, without having the actual
Occupancy; as, when the owner of a lot of land, regularly laid out, is in
possession of any part, he is considered constructively in possession of the
whole. 11 Vern. R. 129. What removal of property or loss of possession will
be sufficient to constitute larceny, vide 2 Chit. Cr. Law, 919; 19 Jurist,
14; Etienne, h.t. Civ. Code of Louis. 3391, et seq.
5. Possession, in the civil law, is divided into natural and civil. The
same division is adopted by the Civil Code of Louisiana.
6. Natural possession is that by which a man detains a thing corporeal,
as by occupying a house, cultivating ground, or retaining a movable in his
possession. Natural possession is also defined to be the corporeal detention
of a thing, which we possess as belonging to us, without any title to that
possession, or with a title which is void. Civ. Code of Lo. art. 3391, 3393.
7. Possession is civil, when a person ceases to reside in a house or on
the land which he occupied, or to detain the movable which he possessed, but
without intending to abandon the possession. It is the detention of a thing,
by virtue of a just title, and under the conviction of possessing as owner.
Id. art. 3392, 3394.
8. Possession applies properly only to corporeal things, movables and
immovables. The possession of incorporeal rights, such as servitudes and
other rights of that nature, is only a quasi. possession, and is exercised
by a species of possession of which these rights are susceptible. Id. art.
3395.
9. Possession may be enjoyed by the proprietor of the, thing, or by
another for him; thus the proprietor of a house possesses it by his tenant
or farmer.
10. To acquire possession of a property, two things are requisite. 1.
The intention of possessing as owner. 2. The corporeal possession of the
thing. Id. art. 3399.
11. Possession is lost with or without the consent of the possessor. It
is lost with his consent, 1. When he transfers this possession to another
with the intention to divest himself of it. 2. When he does some act, which
manifests his intention of abandoning possession, as when a man throws into
the street furniture or clothes, of which he no longer chooses to make use.
Id. art. 3411. A possessor of an estate loses the possession against his
consent. 1. When another expels him from it, whether by force in driving him
away, or by usurping possession during his absence, and preventing him from
reentering. 2. When the possessor of an estate allows it to be usurped, and
held for a year, without, during that time, having done any act of
possession, or interfered with the usurper's possession. Id. art. 3412.
12. As to the effects of the purchaser's taking possession, see Sugd.
Vend. 8, 9; 3 P. Wms. 193; 1 Ves. Jr. 226; 12 Ves. Jr. 27; 11 Ves. Jr. 464.
Vide, generally, 5 Harr. & John. 230, 263; 6 Har. & John. 336; 1 Har. &
John. 18; 1 Greenl. R. 109; 2 Har. & McH. 60, 254, 260; 3 Bibb, R. 209 1
Har. & McH., 210; 4 Bibb, R. 412, 6 Cowen, R. 632; 9 Cowen, R. 241; 5 Wheat.
R. 116, 124; Cowp. 217; Code Nap. art. 2228; Code of the Two Sicilies, art.
2134; Bavarian Code, B. 2, c. 4, n. 5; Prus. Code, art. 579; Domat, Lois
Civ. liv. 3, t, 7, s. 1; Vin. Ab. h.t.; Wolff, Inst. Sec. 200, and the note
in the French translation; 2 Greenl. Ev. Sec. 614, 615; Co. Litt. 57 a; Cro.
El. 777; 5 Co. 13; 7 John. 1.

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